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Personal and Social, Lifetime, Burdens are Predictable – at 3!

There is nothing more predictable in health or social welfare then childhood trauma!

Test predicts which children will grow up to be drain on society – when they are just three years old. “Most expenses from social problems are concentrated in a small segment of the population…And we can predict this quite well, beginning at age three by assessing a child’s history of disadvantage, and particularly their brain health. There is a really powerful connection from children’s early beginnings to where they end up.”

Around one third of people place no burden on public services

A simple test at the age of three can determine whether children will grow up to be a burden on society, needing excessive welfare, ending up in jail or becoming obese. Scientists at King’s College London followed more than 1,000 children from before school until they were 38, to find out if it was possible to predict who would go on to lead troubled lives. All were given a 45 minute test aged three to gauge intelligence, language and motor skills, and were also assessed about their levels of tolerance, restlessness, impulsivity and social disadvantage.

After 35 years, the researchers found one fifth of the group was responsible for:
– 81 per cent of the criminal convictions;
– three quarters of drug prescriptions;
– two thirds of welfare benefit payments
– more than half of nights in hospital
– As well as increased criminality and NHS use, the most-costly participants of the study also carried 40 per cent of the obese weight
– and filed 36 per cent of personal-injury insurance claims.

But crucially, they discovered that the outcome could have been predicted decades earlier, simply by looking at which children attained the lowest test scores aged three. The team believe that if all children could be tested it would be possible to work out who were at greatest risk, so that interventions could be made to prevent them slipping into a life where they were a burden on the state.

“About 20 per cent of population is using the lion’s share of a wide array of public services…The same people use most of the NHS, the criminal courts, insurance claims, for disabling injury, pharmaceutical prescriptions and special welfare benefits. If we stopped there it might be fair to think these are lazy bums who are freeloading off the taxpayer and exploiting the public purse. But we also went further back into their childhood and found that 20 per cent begin their lives with mild problems with brain function and brain health when they were very small children. Looking at health examinations really changed the whole picture. It gives you a feeling of compassion for these people as opposed to a feeling of blame. Being able to predict which children will struggle is an opportunity to intervene in their lives very early to attempt to change their trajectories, for everyone’s benefit and could bring big returns on investment for government.”

Rena Subotnik, director of the Center for Psychology in Schools and Education for the American Psychological Association, said that if problem children could be targeted early society could benefit hugely in the long term.

“You get the best bang for the buck with early intervention,” she said. “These are all traits that can be controlled and improved upon, so identifying them in young children is a gift, and all of society would benefit. “This study really gives a pretty clear picture of what happens if you don’t intervene.”

The team is now hoping to study the one third of people in the group who seemed to never use public services, but simply paid in tax.
“I think they are really interesting people,” added Prof Moffitt. “They make up the support ratio. They haven’t been to the hospital, they haven’t been before the criminal court. “We have this silver tsunami of disabled baby boomers and these are the young people who are going to be footing the bill.”